Here's Even More Convincing Evidence That Jon Snow Will Be Back on Game of Thrones

We've got approximately three months until season six of Game of Thrones premieres on HBO, and those three months look like they are going to continue to be filled with the endless Jon Snow mind games. Our hopes of any return were originally dashed when HBO's president of programming said that Snow was "dead is dead is dead is dead." But the validity of those four "deads" were called into question when Kit Harington was spotted filming a scene on set at Winterfell with Sansa Stark, Ramsay Bolton, and Littlefinger—three very alive characters, by last accounts. And now, we've got three more pieces of very convincing evidence to file away in our "Jon Snow Is Alive" folder.

First up: Maisie Williams, who plays Arya Stark, was questioned on the red carpet of the U.K. Critics' Circle Awards about Jon Snow's alleged "death." While she wouldn't come out and say outright whether Snow was alive or dead, Williams did share this about Snow in season six: "It's a great twist, but I can't say he's going to be alive." The actress also made an interesting face after revealing the tidbit, which we'll obviously be overanalyzing from here until April.

Second: Emilia Clarke a.k.a. Daenerys Targaryen spoke to E! News after the Golden Globes about the upcoming GoT season. She was even more tight-lipped about Jon Snow, but Clarke did say this in response to the alive-or-dead debate: "I really can't say much apart from you'll see the biggest moments on television that have ever existed...it's going to be big." What could be bigger than him returning from the dead?

And last but not least: HBO has been using Jon Snow's bloodied—but very alive—face in all of their season six posters and videos. On the one hand, it could just be an (albeit infuriating) publicity ploy. But on the flip side, would the network really use Snow in their promos if he wasn't returning in some capacity?

Between Jon Snow and Steven Avery, our brains can't handle much more mind-effery.